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Seven Georgians tried in France over theft of rare Russian books
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Trump says in 'final throes' of reaching Middle East peace deal
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Business, unions unite against Swiss immigration cap push
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Outdoor hospitals, cut-off communities as Philippine quake toll hits 41
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Spain beat Peru 3-1 to head into World Cup on high
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China exports surge as Beijing withstands Middle East stress
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Spurs edge Knicks 115-111 in NBA Finals as Trump booed
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Hopes soar for US fans as hosts assemble at World Cup camp
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French justice minister refuses to resign over girl killing case
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Asian stocks track Wall St tech bounce, oil eases on Mideast hope
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Encouraging trial results for AstraZeneca's new weight-loss pill
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Hundreds evacuated as waves batter New Zealand capital
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Former rugby league star in Australia comes out as gay
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Bolivian president says 'narcoterrorists' behind crippling protests
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World Cup nears kickoff after pre-tournament turbulence
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Trump gets cold hometown welcome at NBA Finals in New York
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Deschamps tips hat-trick man Olise to make big impact at World Cup
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Mexico promises peaceful World Cup opening despite protests
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Somali referee is dropped from World Cup after turned back at US border
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OpenAI makes move to go public one week after rival Anthropic
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World Cup is 'full circle' for London-raised US striker Balogun
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Olise smashes hat-trick as France beat N. Ireland in pre-World Cup game
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Serena Williams to return to tennis in Queen's doubles on Tuesday
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Somali referee axed from World Cup after being denied entry to US: FIFA
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Brazil suspends dengue vaccine following two deaths
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Tech stock rebound drives Wall Street gains, oil pares rise after fresh strikes
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Federer to play in US Open exhibition event
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Stokes facing uncertain future as England captain after nightclub incident 'with rugby player'
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Killing the mood: smartphones reduce birth rate, studies say
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Wildcard snub surprises Queen's champion Maria
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Leftist takes lead in Peru's too-close-to-call presidential runoff
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Earthquake rattles Cuban capital Havana: AFP reporters
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France, Germany abandon joint fighter jet project
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England's Stokes, Atkinson under investigation for nightclub incident
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Platini switches to French courts in long-running FIFA feud
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Kennedy Center drops Trump name from website
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Give Brazil the respect we deserve, says World Cup star Guimaraes
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Bolivia protests: president warns 'narcoterrorists' days numbered
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Apple tries again on AI, turns to Google for help
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UN warns of 'deepening crisis' in oceans, urges action
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Giroud pens one-year Lille contract extension aged 39
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'We need to get off fossil fuels': COP31 negotiations chief tells AFP
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Uber and Wayve set to launch first UK robotaxis in summer
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Pope promises abuse victims Church will do more to change
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Liverpool cult hero Origi retires from football at 31
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'Our mission as Oceanians': French Polynesia to protect more ocean
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Lockdown in New York as Trump to attend NBA Finals
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Yacht traffic increased sixfold for Monaco Grand Prix: maritime data
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Somali referee denied entry to US for World Cup: official
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Italy's World Cup winner Grosso appointed Fiorentina coach
Nintendo agrees to 35 mn euro French fine over faulty Switch controllers
Nintendo said Monday that it would pay a fine of 35 million euros ($40 million) to settle a French claim over faulty controllers on its Switch consoles.
A French consumer advocacy group filed the claim alleging "planned obsolescence" in 2020, saying the Japanese giant knew some controllers were failing too quickly.
It noted thousands of complaints by customers about "Joy-Con drift", with toggles stuck in one direction on the original version of the Switch, even when users were not touching them.
France's consumer protection agency, DGCCRF, determined that Nintendo Europe had not sufficiently informed consumers of the recurring problem despite the console being sold for years since its 2017 launch.
Its report said Nintendo had "commented only in 2020, and not as soon as it was aware of the malfunctions", the Commerce Ministry and the court in Nanterre, outside Paris, said in a statement.
It added that Nintendo's statements on the problem were "patchy", and as a result many customers simply bought new controllers, instead of pursuing a free fix or replacement via customer service.
Nintendo promised in 2023 that it would repair or replace faulty controllers without cost, even if no longer covered by warranty.
F.Pavlenko--BTB